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RESIDENTS IN WATERMOUNT AND OTHER AREAS NOW HAVE ACCESS TO POTABLE WATER

KINGSTON, March 13 (JIS): More than 7,000 residents in and around the Watermount area of St. Catherine now have access to potable water from the $220-million upgraded system.

The communities being served by the Watermount Water Supply System are Mendez, Back Pasture, Cudjoe’s Hill, Old Works, Watermount, Barry and Pedro. It was developed by the Rural Water Supply Limited (RWSL).

The St. Catherine Municipal Corporation, which will now operate the system, had initiated work on the project.

At the recent commissioning ceremony, Minister of Local Government and Rural Development, Hon. Desmond McKenzie, in praising the work of the RWSL said it is making a sterling effort to provide communities with durable water systems.

“It is the commitment of the Government to ensure that this basic and important commodity is available to all Jamaicans,” Mr. McKenzie said.

Water is sourced from the William Gully Dam, with new transmission and distribution lines installed and construction of a storage tank and pump station.

Member of Parliament for St. Catherine West Central, Dr. the Hon. Christopher Tufton, said collaboration has worked for the beneficiaries of the project.

While noting the collaboration among the various agencies to complete the system, Dr. Tufton said a lot of “energies were put into delivering the project”.

“It is timely, and I am grateful for the people,” he told the ceremony, adding that given the drought that is now affecting the island, people should be extra careful in how they use water.

For his part, Mayor of Spanish Town, Councillor Norman Scott, said the building of the system is a clear indication that the Corporat6ion is resolved to give communities clean, potable and safe water at all times.

He emphasised that it is an investment that the residents must pay for, because if they do not pay their bills regularly, “we won’t be able to keep the system functional”.

Managing Director of the RWSL, Audley Thompson, told the gathering that it was a costly undertaking to develop the facility, and that the water is for “your domestic use”, and there should be no massive watering of fields.

“That wasn’t what the system was designed for, so you need to take care of it,”           Mr. Thompson said.

For Principal of the Watermount Primary and Infant School, Karlene Thomas-Laing, it was a moment longed for by many community members, as on occasions inadequate supply of water affected classes at the institution.

“Thank God, this is only a memory,” she said, adding that the institution is now in a better position to care for the children.

FIRE BRIGADE URGES VIGILANCE TO PREVENT BUSHFIRES

KINGSTON, March  9 (JIS): Members of the public are being urged to exercise greater vigilance to prevent bushfires.

Commissioner of the Jamaica Fire Brigade (JFB), Stewart Beckford, who made the appeal, said persons should desist from lighting fires to burn garbage or clear land for planting and ensure that cigarettes are properly extinguished before discarding them.

He said that open flames, particularly given the current dry conditions, can easily get out of control and cause bushfires, endangering life and property.

He noted that the JFB has been seeing a major increase in bushfires since the start of the year that are caused by human activity.

“The profile, especially so far, this year, is particularly troubling. The key feature of any bushfire is that it is an act of nature, such as spontaneous combustion caused by heat and dry conditions, or combustion caused by lightning. What we are seeing, so far in 2023, is an escalation of that pattern where in almost every case the bushfires are being directly caused by people’s actions,” Commissioner Beckford said.

He was addressing a press briefing hosted by Minister of Local Government and Rural Development, Hon. Desmond McKenzie, at the Ministry in Kingston on Thursday (March 9), to discuss measures to tackle bushfires.

Since the start of 2023, there have been 1,968 such fires across the island. The number is alarming, the Commissioner said, given that for the entire 2022, there were 3,518 bushfires.

Commissioner Beckford said that the continued drought conditions make collection and transportation of water for firefighting more challenging, which has implications for response time and the length of cooling-down operations.

He noted that water intended for domestic purposes is being diverted to fight the fires.

“It is against this background that the JFB is calling for the cooperation of our citizens to preserve their own interests – their houses, their businesses their properties – by stopping the habits that they know can cause fires,” he implored.

Commissioner Beckford says the JFB is working closely with the National Water Commission (NWC) to ensure that water is available for firefighting activities.

CONTACT: ROCHELLE WILLIAMS

LOCAL GOVERNMENT MINISTER SOUNDS ALARM ABOUT HIGH NUMBER OF BUSHFIRES BEING CAUSED BY HUMAN ACTION

Minister of Local Government and Rural Development, Hon. Desmond McKenzie, is expressing grave concern about the very high number of bush-fires being directly caused by human activity across the country.

“This is an extremely serious and worrying matter. We had 1, 303 bush-fires in Jamaica for the month of February this year. This very high number is a 95% increase over the 665 bush-fires that occurred in January. For February, St. Catherine and Kingston and St. Andrew recorded the highest number of bush-fire incidents, at 270 and 180 respectively. At the other end of the spectrum, Portland had 18 bush-fires for the month. In almost every instance, these bush-fires were not caused by the very dry weather conditions, but by people burning garbage and the fires getting out of control, by farmers burning sections of land to prepare for planting, and by persons throwing the butts of cigarettes on the ground after smoking. Just last weekend, there was a huge bush-fire in the hills of St. Andrew that the Jamaica Fire Brigade had to address, with the assistance of Jamaica Defence Force helicopters dipping aerial buckets into the Hermitage Dam to drop thousands of gallons of water on the burning area. This is precious water that could have gone to our households in this time of Meteorological Drought, rather than having to be used to extinguish a preventable fire. The JFB is doing all it can to respond to fires as well as to prevent fires, through the outreach of the Community and Life Safety Programme, but we must as a people take this matter far more seriously.

“I am appealing yet again to our citizens to stop using fire in irresponsible ways. We cannot be casually lighting garbage, especially in these dry and windy conditions. The use of fire to clear land is not an efficient agricultural method. Smokers must extinguish and dispose of the remains of their cigarettes properly. I am asking for much greater levels of personal responsibility, to ensure that all fires are reduced to the absolute minimum.”

The Municipal Social Assistance Programme

The Government in its commitment to improve the lives of the most vulnerable and strengthen service delivery to citizens; embarked on a programme to transform the Poor Relief System into a human service organization of excellence.

The Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development (MLGRD) is a key player in this transformation. The Ministry continues to enhance its support to the local authorities, and thereby their contribution to the local governance landscape especially through the Municipal Social Assistance Programme (MSAP).

 

MSAP COMPONENTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES

The MSAP is an approved programme of the MLGRD, which retains overall responsibility, but delegates the necessary authority for its smooth operation to the relevant Municipal Corporations and the Poor Relief Departments, where appropriate.

The Fund meets its objectives through the allocation of monies to enable the effective delivery of social services to vulnerable citizens and provide administrative support to elected Parochial Representatives/Councillors under four components. They are:

  1. Office/Administration Support to Divisions
  2. Social Housing Assistance
  3. Indigent Housing Assistance
  4. Funeral and Education Grant

 

Component 1: Office/Administration Support to Divisions

  1. Special Allowance (Administrative/Office Staff)
  2. Specially Assigned Computer Tablets

 

Component 2: Social Housing Assistance

  1. Assistance Towards Housing Units
  2. House Repairs and Minor Improvement
  3. Disaster Preparedness and Response Assistance

 

Component 3: Indigent Housing Assistance

  1. House Construction
  2. Complete Housing Unit

 

Component 4: Funeral and Education Grant

  1. Offsetting of Funeral Expenses
  2. Assistance for School Supplies and Uniforms
  3. Examination Fees and Registration
  4. School Auxiliary and Registration Fees

 

PLEASE BOX:

To find out how to benefit, please contact with the respective Municipal Corporation (formerly Parish Council) in each parish or get in touch with:

The Board of Supervision

Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development

61 Hagley Park Road, Kingston 10

Telephone: 876-618-7360-9

Email:  [email protected]

LOCAL GOVERNMENT AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT MINISTER MOURNS DEATH OF COUNCILLOR FOR ISLINGTON DIVISION

Minister of Local Government and Rural Development, Hon. Desmond McKenzie, has expressed shock and sadness at the passing of the Councillor for the Islingston Division in St. Mary, Mr. Lincoln Dixon. Mr. Dixon died earlier today.

“I was shocked when I heard this news, especially after the recent passing of Councillor Dixon’s son. This unexpected event has left everyone stunned, from family and friends, to his colleagues in the St. Mary Municipal Corporation and his political home, the Peoples’ National Party.

“Lincoln Dixon came to officially serve as the Councillor for the Islington Division, following the Local Government Elections of 2012, and served its people and the local government system with dedication. They rewarded him with the unprecedented distinction of voting for him to represent them in consecutive elections. No standard-bearer of any political party had ever won the Islington Division in back-to-back local government elections.

“I also want to use his untimely passing to pay tribute to the elected servants of local government who we have lost more recently. Lincoln Dixon made his mark in the relatively short time that he served as a Councillor, and I want to say publicly to his friends and colleagues that his efforts were not in vain. For his family, I pray for the strength and faith to endure this terrible time of loss. May he rest in peace for eternity, in the everlasting embrace of his Creator.”

Rural Development Programme advances in Chambers Pen, Hanover

The multi-faceted Rural Development Programme (RDP) is progressing in the community of Chambers Pen, Western Hanover.

The RDP is spearheaded by the Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development.

“The work is about 30 percent complete – the (Chambers Pen All Age) school, the electrical wiring, the distribution of the water tanks, we have already put in the water distribution lines. There are some more connections to be made, with the roads and other things that are going to come,” explained Portfolio Minister, Honourable Desmond McKenzie.

“Once that gets started it will get us, hopefully by the middle of the year, to about 80 per cent complete.

Chambers Pen is the RDP pilot project where resources of more than J$223 million are being spent to improve the social and physical conditions of the community.

A partnership between the local government and education ministries saw the principal’s cottage and the cafeteria at the all-age school renovated at a cost of J$30m. Computer tablets are to be distributed to students, and the school ground is also slated for repairs at a later date.

The next phase of work will involve the community park and the community centre.

Minister McKenzie said he was ecstatic about the advancements on the ground.

“I am feeling very good about the progress of the work between the Jamaica Social Investment Fund, that has come in and have completed their work. The Jamaica Public Service is to come to put in streetlights in certain selected areas, Rural Water Supply Limited has been working, the Social Development Commission has been on the ground…now the real construction will start, which includes repairs to the bridges, the putting in of the curb walls, sidewalks, and rehabilitation of the roads.”

The RDP was announced by the Government in 2021 and a total of four communities islandwide are to benefit from the initiative in the first phase of the programme.

The Minister visited Chambers Pen on February 16 and participated in several activities including a tour of the Chambers Pen All Age School; the commissioning of the Chambers Pen Water Supply System and a contract signing for road rehabilitation as well as the handover of an indigent housing solution.

“Ladies and gentlemen, all of this investment will mean nothing if the community doesn’t embrace and take care of this investment. This is your tax dollar working for you… I urge you to take care of the investment,” he said during the ceremony to commission the water system.

Rural Water Supply Limited’s Managing Director, Mr. Audley Thompson, says the entity spent J$49m on the system that will be connected to that of the National Water Commission (NWC). Households will also be provided with 400-gallon black water tanks for standby supply. To date, 300 tanks have been distributed.

Chambers Pen is a farming community located approximately nine kilometres east of Lucea, with an estimated population of 1,100 residents. The adjoining communities include Dundee Pen, Eaton, Harvey River, and McLaren Gate.

St. James Infirmary gets new J$45m male ward

The St. James Infirmary now boasts a new male ward built at a cost of J$45 million through a joint venture between the National Housing Trust and the St. James Municipal Corporation.

The new addition, which will house 40 residents, was officially opened by Honourable Desmond McKenzie, Minister of Local Government and Rural Development during a special ceremony at the facility on February 15.

The Minister shared that the Government has spent more than J$1 billion to date improving facilities for the country’s most vulnerable citizens through its infirmaries and homeless shelters.

“Improving the conditions of the less fortunate must become a priority of the Government, [and] all infirmaries in Jamaica, under this Administration, have received significant benefits.”

He commended the technical team who directed the ward’s construction and described the design as “really wonderful”.

Minister McKenzie posited that the focus will now shift to the construction of a new kitchen and dining hall at the St. James Infirmary.

The Ministry also provided a tranche of J$11m to outfit the new ward with furniture including beds and other items such as appliances, medical equipment, stand aids, and appliances. The new ward is also equipped with a dormitory; a doctor’s office, physiotherapy room, shower room, and bathroom.

Last November, a therapeutic park was commissioned at the Infirmary located in Albion, Montego Bay. The park boasts recreational spaces, a mural and a water fountain.

Mayor of Montego Bay and Chairman of the St. James Municipal Corporation, Councillor Leeroy Williams, said the construction of the new ward reflected the Infirmary’s growth through improved operations and service delivery.

“In the near future, we will see the construction of a new female ward, and as we continue to grow, we will not leave the vulnerable behind. This modern facility will be a beacon of hope and will boast the spirits of residents and their families, while also improving the work and morale of the caregivers,” he noted.

Bill piloted to postpone Local Government Elections -Polls on hold until February 2024

KINGSTON, Jamaica: Local Government and Rural Development Minister, Honourable Desmond McKenzie on Tuesday piloted a Bill in the Houses of Representatives effectively postponing Local Government Elections until February 2024.

The Bill entitled Representation of the People (Postponement of Elections to Municipal Corporations and City Municipalities) Act, 2023. Last February, the House passed an amendment Act to temporarily modify the Representation of the People Act to push back the polls until February 28, 2023.

Minister McKenzie told his colleague Parliamentarians that Jamaica’s delicate post-Covid 19 recovery is foremost for the Government.

“We are in a better position than last year but we are not out of the woods yet. On the economic front, The Government is sharply focused on two main things. One, building of national resilience against further economic shocks whether caused by man-made or natural factors,” he explained.

“Two, the expansion and sustenance of economic growth that all our citizens can feel and see at a personal level.”

He underscored that holding the polls at this time risks diverting the country from these two vital tasks. The Minister also noted that the postponement will facilitate the conclusion of public consultation concerning draft legislation that will establish Portmore as Jamaica’s 15th parish.

“The legislation will among other things set Portmore’s parish boundaries, and will therefore be inseparable from the process of holding the next Local Government Elections. It means that for the first time since the practice of Universal Adult Suffrage in Jamaica, the residents of fifteen parishes will elect their local government representatives. We look forward to the historic experience of inviting the people of the parish of Portmore to go to the polls.”

Minister McKenzie maintained that the decision to seek this postponement was not hasty.

He added: “The Government of Jamaica cherishes its democratic credentials, and will do nothing to undermine the primary expression of a democratic society – the right to vote. As the Minister responsible for Local Government, I wish to assure the House and the country that we are still committed to having the next Local Government Elections, in the shortest practicable time”.

 

Water Shop opened in Mile Gully, Manchester

MILE GULLY, Manchester:  A J$14 million water shop, storing 16,000 gallons of the commodity, has been officially opened to serve residents of Mile Gully and its environs in Manchester.

 The facility, which is a project under the Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development, will be operated by the Manchester Municipal Corporation.

“The Government has been working to improve the water supply systems across the country, not just by means of putting in water shops, but to make communities accessible to the service provided by the National Water Commission,” Portfolio Minister, Honourable Desmond McKenzie said during the handover ceremony on February 10.

“We can’t just snap our fingers and the problems are solved overnight, but every step that we take is a step in the right direction.”

He also appealed to the residents to take care of the water shop and not to allow it to be used for commercial purposes.

“… They use it to establish car wash. They use it for farming and the one that is more disgusting than anything else is that they drive up and they load drums of water and go and sell it to people,” he said.

“This is not something that we are going to tolerate. In one particular parish, we have already caught two of the culprits red-handed.”

Minister McKenzie also visited the site of a water shop under construction in Somerset, Manchester. Three other water shops are operating in the parish, and the Rural Water Supply Limited will undertake a J$12m renovation project of the water facility in Plowden district.

Member of Parliament for North West Manchester, Mr. Mikael Phillips, lauded the Minister for his assistance in supplying water to the constituency. He said these efforts will make a significant impact in addressing the chronic water shortage in the constituency where only 30 percent of residents have potable water.

 “This water shop is important to the surrounding communities that will greatly benefit from it. North West has quite a bit of parish tanks and what we have been doing through the councillors and myself is that we have been using the CDF (Community Development Fund) and installing 2000-gallons water tanks at various points across the constituency,” the MP shared.

“If there is anything else that we ask, is that the Ministry helps us in putting in more of these wayside tanks that I will match with my CDF with the delivery of water.”

Minister McKenzie also disclosed that budgetary allocation has been made for four additional water shops to be built in Manchester during the 2023/2024 financial year.

MINISTER OF LOCAL GOVERNMENT CONDEMNS MURDER OF HOMELESS MAN IN PORT MARIA, ST. MARY

Minister of Local Government and Rural Development Hon. Desmond McKenzie has strongly denounced the murder of Mr. O’Neil Collin, a homeless man whose body was found with the throat slashed in Port Maria, St. Mary yesterday (Sunday).

“What we know so far is that Mr. Collin’s body was found yesterday morning, near the Port Maria Police Station. He was well known to the St. Mary Poor Relief Department, and was a regular user of the Drop-In Centre in the parish. Indeed, staff members of the Poor Relief  Department were on a routine assignment to feed homeless persons when they encountered the tragic scene, which the police had started to process.

“O’Neil Collin was known as a quiet, unassuming man who largely kept to himself and had no known conflict with anyone. It is beyond baffling as to why anyone would want to hurt him, much more to destroy him in this heinous way. This is a terrible act, and I await the conclusion of the investigations by the Port Maria Police. I am also concerned about reports that another homeless person was beaten and is now in hospital, though thankfully his injuries are not considered life-threatening.

“Our homeless men and women are citizens of Jamaica, and their lives are no less valuable than our people who enjoy a better standard of living. I urge anyone who may have witnessed what happened to provide the police with any available facts. No civilized society can allow acts such as these to go by the wayside.

“While we do not yet know the circumstances of Mr. Collin’s death, I want to urge our homeless population to use the Night Shelters regularly not only for food and hygiene, but also for security. Almost all the attacks on our homeless citizens have taken place during the hours of darkness. We continue, through the Local Authorities, to appeal directly to them to make even greater use of the infrastructure and services that these facilities provide.”